With the transmission of a
curiously tone-deaf note to the university community, Louisiana State
University President F. King Alexander gave notice that the University seemed
ready to surrender its role as an instigator and propagator of critical
inquiry, robust debate, and advancement of learning.
After the University
of Missouri’s leadership committed professional hari-kari last month in the
face of emotion-laden, mindless protests over administrative clumsiness in
dealing with alleged racial incidents on its Columbia campus, Alexander felt
compelled to send out a memo addressing the issue. He wrote, “Freedom of speech
is an integral part of the collegiate experience, but no one is entitled to
express their views in a way that diminishes others” because that means
“members of our community do not feel safe and welcome at their own
university.” Thus, “Oppressive behavior, whether symbolic, verbal, or physical,
cannot and will not be tolerated at LSU.”
Unfortunately and problematically,
Alexander did not elaborate on what he considers constitutes “oppressive
behavior,” although he pledged campus-wide discussion on the matter.
Nonetheless, while claiming “Freedom of expression is a sacred right,” he added
“that right should be exercised hand-in-hand with a demonstration of our mutual
respect for everyone, regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, religious beliefs,
or sexual orientation.”
So what acts connote lack of
“mutual respect?” Certainly if bigots decided to burn a cross in front of the
campus African American Cultural Center this unambiguously sends a signal not
just of disrespect, but also that blacks in the LSU community should feel
physically unsafe.
Yet what about driving a vehicle
around campus with an emblem on it of a Confederate flag? Even if the display
came from an explicit wish of the owner to convey a notion of black racial
inferiority – few who show off these emblems intend that as their main message,
if at all – does that then “oppress” others and fails to show “mutual respect?”
Civil libertarians reject the
affirmative of that argument. They point out that people do not have the right
not to take offense at speech and thereby censor it on the basis that one or
more individuals may find it offensive. They also note that government can and
must draw a reasonable border between genuine harassment and free speech.
Advocating a racist doctrine may denote asininity of its deliverer and offend others,
but it does not harass.
More troubling, Alexander seems
poised to abdicate the university’s guaranteeing of a marketplace of ideas
where critical thinking leads us to the best of these, a function describing
the very essence of the university. His remarks indicate a willingness to
impose a speech code, lamentably following
a trend on other campuses, based upon what the “community” feels
appropriate, which becomes very problematic.
For example, some in the social
sciences believe in a noxious doctrine known as “symbolic racism.” That is, if
one opposes government programs and policies that disproportionately in the
population aid minorities – such as cash welfare benefits or affirmative action
in hiring and contracting – many believers in the validity of “symbolic racism”
argue that in this instance one practices it because of the implication that
minorities need assistance to overcome alleged racism infused into society. Do
members of the university community require censoring when they disseminate
issue preferences opposing affirmative action and decreasing cash welfare
benefits?
Or how about classes that involve
study of Islam? By American cultural standards, women come off badly in their societal
roles and how they must live their lives according to Islam. So should the
solution of a female student feeling threatened when a discussion of women’s
places defined by Islam occurs in the classroom entail removing that material? In
a way that the display of a Confederate flag decal on a vehicle does not,
restrictions in these examples strike at the very core of the purpose and
existence of the university.
The ambiguity present in
Alexander’s notice dangerously sends a chilling message to the very place so
dependent upon robustness in speech that it cannot serve its intended purpose
without keeping such speech protected. At the very least, Alexander must
clarify his remarks to delineate a commonsensical and realistic boundary
between safeguarded speech that may offend some but does not harass and speech that
genuinely threatens physical well-being. The end product of the discussions he
plans to pursue ideally will do that.
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